Tuesday, 3 February 2026

TOON TUESDAY #89


We begin this week where we left off last week, with the end of Andy Burnham's leadership ambitions (for now, anyway).  We then move on to a bumper selection depicting Starmer's visit to China, a state run in a totalitarian fashion to which our PM aspires.  Finally, we end with the Dark Lord of Epstein Island...

Graeme Bandeira for The Northern Agenda
Matt Pritchett for The Daily Telegraph
Chris Riddell for The Observer
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Andy Bunday on Instagram
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Morten Morland for The Times
Matt Pritchett for The Daily Telegraph
Peter Brookes for The Times
Morten Morland for The Times
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Nick Newman for The Sunday Times
Matt Pritchett for The Sunday Telegraph
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Ben Jennings for The Guardian
Matt Pritchett for The Daily Telegraph
Morten Morland for The Times
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph

Monday, 2 February 2026

MEME MONDAY #68

Our week began a little later than usual, but we kicked off on Wednesday with Starmer's visit to the  world's largest communist state and the model upon which his globalist handlers build their dystopian plans for our future...

Wed 28 Jan - 105 shares
Wed 28 Jan - 4 shares
Thu 29 Jan - 134 shares
Fri 30 Jan - 12 shares
Sat 31 Jan - 55 shares
Sat 31 Jan - 9 shares
Sun 1 Feb - 1,160 shares.  Karl's been sneaking some existing memes in,
particularly on the back-up page.  This classic Jones quote was even
more popular the second time around.
Sun 1 Feb - 109 shares

Two 'Diversity is Strength' Facebook Stories were also published last week.


If you appreciate what we do, you can buy us a metaphorical pint each here - we can't do this without your support.  Feel free to share our work, on the understanding that our binlabour.com watermark is retained.

Thank you.

Sunday, 1 February 2026

BOATWATCH #44

Stormy weather brought another winter lull in crossings last week.  A big fat zero.

Thursday, 29 January 2026

COUNCIL BY-ELECTION 29.01.26


Just one solitary council seat was up for grabs on Thursday, up in the Lowlands of Scotland.  The vacancy arose after the incumbent Conservative was found guilty of fraud and embezzlement.  Last time round all three seats were available and the Tories finished second in a tight three way contest.  The SNP had finished in front on first preferences, just twelve votes ahead of the Tories who in turn were only five votes ahead of the Lib Dems.  The three parties picked up a seat each.

With the circumstances surrounding the outgoing councillor, this was a highly unlikely hold for the Tories and we fancied the Lib Dems this time.  Indeed, the Tories crashed and burned, dropping to sixth place and propped up by only the Scottish Family Party.  The victorious Lib Dems surged way out in front of the SNP.

Bearsden South, East Dunbartonshire Council

LDm: 1,744 (38.1%) +14.9%
SNP: 789 (17.2%) -6.2%
Ref: 709 (15.5%) New
Lab: 650 (14.2%) -1.9%
Grn: 371 (8.1%) +0.9%
Con: 283 (6.2%) -17.0%
SFP: 35 (0.8%) New

LDm GAIN from Con

Tuesday, 27 January 2026

TOON TUESDAY #88

This week's selection of Labour chaos includes the outrageous decision to allow the Chinese to build a 'super embassy' in London, alongside another potential u-turn and the Burnham conundrum...

Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Graeme Bandeira for The Northern Agenda
Christian Adams for The Sunday Telegraph
Morten Morland for The Times
Peter Brookes for The Times
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph

Morten Morland for The Times
Steve Bright for The Sun
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Pete Songi for The Guardian

Monday, 26 January 2026

MEME MONDAY #67

A quieter week, but we'll pick up again shortly...

Mon 19 Jan - 90 shares
Tue 20 Jan - 3,064 shares
Tue 20 Jan - 6 shares.  This photo is from a previous Davos, although Reeves did
attend this year.  The fact that the photo is from Davos 2023 - the year prior to their
general election victory - should give you some idea of the influence of the World
Economic Forum
Thu 22 Jan - 199 shares
Thu 22 Jan - 65 shares
Sun 25 Jan - 770 shares
Sun 25 Jan - 58 shares
Sun 25 Jan - 32 shares

If you appreciate what we do, you can buy us a metaphorical pint each here - we can't do this without your support.  Feel free to share our work, on the understanding that our binlabour.com watermark is retained.

Thank you.

Sunday, 25 January 2026

BOATWATCH #43

The flurry of boats at the end of last continued into this week, before a five day lull ensued.  Raise the Colours activists arrived in Calais last week, reportedly to engage in direct action to stop the boats.  They are calling this 'Operation Overlord' (yes, seriously).  It's not clear if they have actually stopped any boats, but the French authorities have been quick to ban what they refer to as 'far right activists' from the region.  True to form for one half of the biggest people smuggling gang of them all (the other half being their British partners at the other end).

Also last week the French intercepted a waterborne small boat for the first time.  Let that sink in - the first time.  Small boat crossings began eight years ago, millions have been sent to France to stop the boats and this was only their first waterborne interception.  It's a scam that will never end.


Total = 413 (down 75 from previous week)

NEC BLOCKS BURNHAM BID


Labour's National Executive Committee has rejected Andy Burnham's request to be considered for the Gorton and Denton by-election.  The NEC took less than 24 hours to consider his request, which was blocked on the grounds of cost and unity.  The decision was reportedly put to a vote of ten members, which included Shabana Mahmood, Lucy Powell, Ellie Reeves (sister of Rachel) and the PM himself.  Mahmood abstained in her position as chair, while the vote went against Burnham almost unanimously by 8-1.  Powell voted in favour of Burnham, having publicly backed his candidacy.

Prior to the vote, Mahmood told reporters that allowing a directly elected mayor to vacate their post had 'organisational implications' for the party.  While allies of Starmer were keen to block Burnham as a defensive move in order to prevent him manoeuvring for a leadership challenge, party sources are briefing that the decision was primarily down to the cost of a mayoral election to replace Burnham were he to win the by-election.  However, another source was quoted as saying the decision was also motivated by the prospect of a 'divisive campaign'.  It is true that some MPs and activists have declared their reluctance to campaign in Gorton and Denton if Burnham was the candidate.

The move is likely to provoke anger among supporters of Burnham, which includes a significant number of MPs.